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  Session of Saddam trial cancelled   (AP)  Updated: 2006-01-24 20:08  
 The court trying Saddam Hussein cancelled the resumption 
of his trial Tuesday, delaying the session for five days because of discord over 
a last-minute shakeup in the court. 
 
 
 
 
   The interior of the courtroom that has been 
 trying former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein is seen in this Dec. 27, 2005 
 photo. Members of Saddam Hussein's toppled regime, even several in 
 custody, may give testimony when the war crimes trial against the former 
 Iraq president and seven co-defendants resumes this week, a U.S. official 
 said Sunday. [AP] |    
 
 
 The delay was the latest sign of disarray in the trial of the ousted Iraqi 
leader and his former regime officials. It came a day after one member of the 
five-judge panel was removed and a new chief judge was appointed. 
 Court official Raid Juhi said the hearing was postponed until Sunday because 
some of the witnesses due to appear today had been unable to attend. He refused 
to elaborate. 
 But two judges said the members of the panel hearing the case were argument 
squabbling over the appointment of the new chief judge, Raouf Rasheed 
Abdel-Rahman. 
 Some judges opposed the appointment, while others supported him, one of the 
two judges said. He said the arguments were still going on as the postponement 
of the session was announced. 
 The other appeared to complain about outside interference in the court. When 
asked what the problem was, he replied, "Matters are not in our hands." 
 It appeared some members were trying to bring back the former chief judge, 
Rizgar Mohammed Amin, or the another jurist who was removed from the panel, 
Saeed al-Hammash. 
 The two judges who spoke to AP were members of the Special Tribunal trying 
the ousted Iraqi leader, though not necessarily sitting on the panel hearing the 
current case. They both spoke on condition of anonymity since court rules bar 
most judges from being named. 
 The first chief judge, Amin, a Kurd, submitted his resignation Jan. 15 after 
complaints by politicians and officials that he failed to maintain control of 
the proceedings. 
 Initially, court officials said Amin would be replaced by his deputy, 
al-Hammash, a Shiite. However, the government commission responsible for purging 
members of Saddam's Baath Party complained last week that al-Hammash should not 
serve as chief judge because of his one-time membership in the former ruling 
party. 
 Al-Hammash was transferred off the case entirely, though court official Raid 
Juhi insisted the move was not connected to the Baath allegation. 
 The man finally appointed to stand as chief judge — Abdel-Rahman, a Kurd — 
was born in Halabja, the town where Saddam's forces allegedly launched a poison 
gas attack in 1988 that killed 5,000 Kurds. Some relatives of Abdel-Rahman were 
among the dead, according to his family. 
 Saddam is expected to eventually go on trial for the Halabja deaths. But the 
current trial, which began Oct. 19 and was holding its eighth session Tuesday, 
is for the killings of about 140 Shiites in a crackdown that followed a failed 
assassination attempt in 1982 against the former ruler in Dujail, 50 miles north 
of Baghdad. 
 Saddam and seven co-defendants could face the death penalty if convicted in 
the Dujail case.  
  
  
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